![Horatio Monroe of Tracy, Calif., comes to PLAYlive Nation to play Fortnite every day after work. He says it relaxes him.](https://npr.brightspotcdn.com/dims4/default/62b0f67/2147483647/strip/true/crop/575x767+224+0/resize/150x200!/quality/90/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fmedia.npr.org%2Fassets%2Fimg%2F2018%2F05%2F04%2Fimg_3928_1024-837fafa3b2966e5980a3ae4861fd05e5a6e4586f.jpg)
Adhiti Bandlamudi
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“Red flag” laws have come up in the national conversation after yet another shooting. But the road to getting one passed is very complicated and marred with conflict.
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Following the shootings in El Paso, Texas, and Dayton, Ohio, which killed at least 31 people, lawmakers started to point to one factor that could have…
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A new study says that fatal shooting cases are getting measurably more attention from police than non-fatal shootings. But one expert thinks giving fatal…
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As school security has become a top priority in communities across the country, security companies have found a thriving new market for their products.…
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Andy Simmons, a lieutenant in the Hillsborough, North Carolina, police department purchased Airsoft guns for a training exercise. When they arrived, he realized they could easily be confused for real guns.
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Lockdown drills have become increasingly common in schools across the United States. Though drills differ from school to school, they usually require…
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A video game analytics firm estimates that the cross-platform game with a wide range of players has made about $223 million in March alone.
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Investigators used DNA and an online genealogical database to hunt down and arrest the Golden State Killer. But now those tactics are raising privacy and legal issues.
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Many gamers are spending big money on retro-games and their consoles, even as new games and consoles are released. What's with this craze to keep the past alive?
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A new cookbook aims to capture the blended cuisine of second-generation Indian-Americans. It pairs recipes with Bollywood movies, for an added taste of home.